Degree Requirements for Integrated Physics Majors
The department of Physics offers curricula leading
to the following degrees:
B.S./M.S. Materials Physics (for UCSD
Undergraduates only)
M.S. and Ph.D. in Physics
Ph.D. in Physics
(Biophysics)
The department has developed a flexible program
provides a broad, advanced education and at the same time gives students
the opportunity to emphasize their special interests. This program consists
of graduate courses, apprenticeship in research, teaching experience,
and thesis research.
Entering graduate students are required to have
a sound knowledge of undergraduate physics, including junior/senior level
courses in classical mechanics and electricity/magnetism; in thermodynamics;
and statistical mechanics; and in quantum physics; and to have taken upper-division
laboratory courses.
Students specializing in Biophysics take courses
in biology and chemistry during the first two years and complete the departmental
course requirements and examinations by the end of their third year of
graduate study. There is no foreign language requirement.
Research in Biophysics is being
actively pursued in several departments (e.g. Physics, chemistry, and biology),
which also offer courses in or relevant to biophysics. Graduate students specializing
in the area of biophysics within the Department of Physics receive the Ph.D.
in Physics (Biophysics).
Master's Degree: Requirements for the M.S.
degree can be met by passing the Departmental Exam and obtaining credit
in thirty-six units of course work (excluding seminars and research).
Up to eight units of graduate work completed at another institution may
be transferred with approval of the department and the Dean of Graduate
Studies and Research.
Entrance Testing: An entrance test covering undergraduate
physics is given to entering students during the first week of orientation
to give better guidance to students in their graduate program. The results
are not entered in the student's file. Entering students are encouraged
to bring the results to the first meeting with their academic advisor.
Entering students may elect to take the Departmental Examination instead
of taking the Entrance Test.
Requirements for the Ph.D. (Revised, June 2000)
Students are required to complete the following requirements: satisfactorily
pass the departmental written exam, complete five advanced graduate courses,
a qualifying examination, teaching requirement, and a final defense of
the thesis as described below.
- 1. Departmental Examination
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-
Physics students are required to take the
Department Examination after completing one year of graduate work
at UCSD. The examination is on the level of material usually covered
in upper-division undergraduate and first-year graduate courses in
classical mechanics (200A,B), and classical electrodynamics (203A,B),
equilibrium statistical mechanics (210A) , quantum mechanics (212A,B,C),
and mathematical methods (201). [The numbers in parentheses are the
corresponding first year courses.]
The examination is offered twice a year, at the beginning of the fall
and spring quarters, and lasts two days, four hours per day. The examination
may be repeated once the next time it is offered.
Biophysics students take this examination after
completing two years of graduate work.
2. Advanced Graduate Courses
Physics students are required to take five advanced
graduate courses (with a grade of C or better) from at least three of
the groups listed below no later than the end of the third year of graduate
work. A 3.0 average in four of the five courses is required.
(In lieu of the course requirement, students may petition to take an
oral examination covering three areas of physics.)
Group 1: Physics 218A, 218B, 218C
(Plasma); 234 (Nonneutral Plasmas); 235 (Nonlinear
Plasma Th)
Group 2: Physics 210B, 210C (Nonequil Stat
Mech); 211A, 211B (Solid State); 219 (Cond. Matt. Lab.); 230 (Adv
Solid State); 232 (Electronic Materials); 236 (Many-body Th)
Group 3: Physics 214 (Elem Part);
215A, 215B, 215C (Part & Fields); 217A, 217B (Renorm
Field Th); 222 (Exp Tech Phys); 233 (Adv Elem Part Th)
Group 4: Physics 220 (Group Th);
221A, 221B (Adv Mech); Math 210A, 210B, 210C (Math
Phys); Math 259A, 259B, 259C (Geom Phys)
Group 5: Physics 206 (Biophys); Physics 207 (X-ray
Crystall); 213A, 213B (Nucl); 216
(Atomic); 225A, 225B (Relativ); 231 (Collision Th); 271 (BioNeuro/Network);
272 (Bio Materials)
Group 6: Physics 223 (Stel Str); 224 (Instrstel
Med); 226 (Galaxies and Galactic Dynamics);
227 (Cosmology); 228 (High Energy Astrophysics and Compact Objects)
Biophysics students select five courses from
Biology, Biochemistry, Chemistry, or Physics in consultation with their
adviser. At least three of these courses must be graduate
courses. Physics courses are to be selected from Groups 1-6
listed above.
3. Instruction in Physics Teaching
After passing the departmental examination and course requirements and before
completing a dissertation, students are required to take a total of no fewer
than two units of Physics 500 (Physics Instruction). Each unit normally corresponds
to approximately five hours per week for one quarter in laboratory sections,
recitation sections or problem sessions. This requirement may be waived in special
cases by the department chairman.
4. Qualifying Examination and Advancement to
Candidacy
In order to be advanced to candidacy, students
must have met the departmental requirements and obtained a faculty research
supervisor. At the time of application for advancement to candidacy,
a doctoral committee responsible for the remainder of the student's
graduate program is appointed by the Dean of Graduate Studies
& Research. The committee conducts the Ph.D. qualifying examination
during which students must demonstrate the ability to engage in thesis
research. Usually this involves the presentation of a plan for
the thesis research project. The committee may ask questions directly
or indirectly related to the project and questions on general physics
which it determines to be relevant. Upon successful completion
of this examination, students are advanced to candidacy and are awarded
the C.Phil. Degree.
5. Thesis Defense
When students have completed their theses, they
are asked to present and defend them before their doctoral committees.
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